‘Cry dear Sphinx’: Egypt’s finance ministry proposes renting out pyramids
Renting out Egypt's iconic landmarks, including the Giza Pyramids, to international clients could rake in up to $150 billion over five years, according to a proposal aimed at boosting the economy submitted to the country's antiquities ministry.
The proposal was authored by Egyptian intellectual Abdallah
Mahfouz, who argued that renting historical sites could help
breathe new life into the country’s economy.
Earlier this week, Adel Abdel Sattar, Egypt's secretary general of
the Supreme Council of Antiquities, reportedly confirmed in an
interview with local station ONTV the existence of the proposal to
rent Egypt’s main monuments – including the pyramids at Giza, the
Sphinx, the Abu Simbel Temple and the temples of Luxor – to
international tourism firms.
“But is it possible that we rent our monuments? … This is our
heritage, our roots,” the official was quoted as saying. Sattar
said he received a request from the Finance Ministry to study the
proposal, which has sparked outrage from local archeologists and
their international counterparts.
"Cry dear Sphinx, people want to rent you out and maybe later
cut you into pieces and sell you! Shame on those who want to rent
you. You are the symbol of dignity, power and Egypt’s ancient
civilization," Egyptology professor Ahmed Saeed of Cairo
University wrote on his Facebook page, according to
Ahramonline.
The country's antiquities ministry has reportedly rejected the
controversial plan, which became the talk of the town and gave rise
to various rumors. The Gulf state of Qatar reportedly expressed
interest in renting Egypt’s landmarks for five years for $200
billion, according to Al Arabiya.
Two years after the rise of the Arab Spring and the fall of
President Hosni Mubarak, Egypt's economic downturn has resulted in
higher budget deficits. Currency reserves are said to be at a
critical level – $14 billion, or three months' worth of imports –
according to US Ambassador Ann Patterson, who said the “reserves
are kept afloat only due to regular injections of cash by Qatar and
Turkey.”
While financial hardships have weakened the country’s economy,
protests have also paralyzed the country's tourism
industry.